AmericanConscience.Org

A voice in the wilderness
My first act of free will
shall be to believe in free will.
William James








It is axiomatic that as
we build a culture
where everyone must
work to survive, then no
"individual" will be
available for our
children.   
Compounding the
challenge, the world is
increasing in
complexity, so nurture
is ever more important.

If individuals cannot
nurture children, then
we must build systems
in the collective to
nurture them.

And this would require
an expansion of a govt
role.  The govt is simply
"us" working together to
achieve what "we" want.
The attitude that govt is
inherently bad is an
unexamined and  
insidious distortion.

The failure of a culture
to put its children "first"
is not only "bad" ... it is
catastrophic ... and a
harbinger of the end.
When Science Flees the U.S.

Publication: Los Angeles Times
Date: 2004 November 29
Author: David Baltimore

The United States is the richest nation on Earth, the world's biggest beneficiary of the
global economy. But will it last?

Not that long ago, the "global economy" meant that routine factory jobs were going
overseas. The unions squawked, but others recognized that the U.S. could concentrate on
high- value-added commerce: discovery, innovation, high-technology manufacturing,
knowledge-based industries. And we've done very well developing technology and growing
our economic base in these areas. So well, in fact, that such development seems like an
auto-catalytic process or a "virtuous cycle" that will continue propelling us forward for
generations.

But the system is overtaking us. We no longer have a lock on technology. Europe is
increasingly competitive, and Asia has the potential to blow us out of the water.

In the last 20 years, many of the students in American universities who majored in the
sciences and engineering came from Asia. Today, significant numbers are staying in Asia
because the schooling there is so improved, and because we have made it harder to study
here. And Asian scientists who have been successful here are returning home. None of
this is lost on the governments of, say, India and China, which are putting huge sums into
modernizing their science infrastructure and universities.

The proof of their success is the number of U.S. companies opening laboratories in China.
Intel and Cisco are leading the way, and many others are seriously looking at the
possibility. Wages there are a third of wages here, and some estimate that the cost of
employing an engineer in China is as little as a tenth of the cost of employing the same
person in the U.S.

But the key is not only cost. These companies have found that the Asian workers are as
good as ours, as imaginative as ours -- and they work longer hours and are more
dedicated.

Where does all this leave the U.S., a nation with so many who are poorly educated
and whose educational system does a particularly ineffective job with math and
science. We have more people who believe in the devil than who believe in
evolution. Why?

There are so many reasons I can call out only a few. One is lack of federal leadership in
funding schooling that emphasizes math and science, another is our fragmented
educational system that leaves so much to local control, another is general
anti-intellectualism and the cult of the sound bite. But I think that the major failure is our
inability as parents to pass on our culture to our children.

I say "inability" because I truly believe that parents want to do better but do not know how.
One reason is the downgrading of family life in the two-wage-earner home, another is the
speed with which technology changes how kids spend their lives and how people
communicate; yet another is a lack of will when it comes to imposing discipline on children.
And one that particularly galls me is the denigration of the word "stress."

When I grew up, we worked hard, played hard and never thought to minimize our activities
because of stress. Sure, people were under stress and some cracked under it, but leading
a "stressful" life was honored because of the accomplishments that could be achieved by
those who could handle it. Today we deify the spa, not late hours solving problems at
school or work. Caltech's high-achieving faculty and students are seen as weirdos
because of their intense focus, but even here, some graduate students and postdoctoral
fellows are seeking a more balanced life.

Now, what are the implications of all this? If technology is done well and more cheaply
abroad, we will either have to seriously reduce salaries here or see the
technology-intensive jobs go abroad. If technologists continue to be plentiful in foreign
countries, wages there will only rise. Demand could fall at home, which would further drive
down wages here.

This will have huge implications for our domestic industries as Asians open their own
companies. The harbinger is Taiwan, whose citizens we have been training for decades
and where many competitive industries already exist. And Taiwan is a small island with only
20 million people. China, an entrepreneurial powerhouse in the formative stages, has 1.3
billion.

So the cascade could begin: If America becomes a less affluent society, we will see a
diminution in support for the research that is critical to our future. There are already clouds
on the horizon: because of the deficit, federal budgets will get tighter and science funding
is likely to suffer. The economic recovery is generating too few jobs. Silicon Valley still has
lots of vacant space. The venture capital industry is scared and conservative.

These trends are real. We cannot afford to ignore them. We must think deeply about the
realities we face. We need to respond to the newest challenges of globalism. A
fortress-America approach will get us nowhere.

///
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David Baltimore won the Nobel Prize in Physiology
for Medicine, for his Research In Virology, in 1975.
He has been President of Caltech Since 1997.
Last Edit : 2005.08.26
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To the extent that the delight in money
becomes a transcendent faith, the converts
to "the world's leading religion" imagine that
money stands as surrogate for all the other
denominations of human currency -- for love,
work, art, play and thought.

Lewis Lapham
Money and Class in America